Ancestor Query

Apache Ant

: A third-party Java library used to build and test your App Engine applications. While Apache Ant is not a Google tool, App Engine's Java SDK includes a set of Ant macros to perform common App Engine development tasks, including starting your development server and uploading your apps to App Engine.

AppCfg Command Line Tool

: Warning: The appcfg tool is now deprecated.
You should move to Cloud SDK tooling such as the gcloud command line.

: The appcfg.py command uploads new versions of your code, configuration, and static files for your application to App Engine. You can also use this command to manage Datastore indexes and download log data.

appengine-web.xml

Application ID

: The application ID is the same as the project ID for the project that you
create in the Google Cloud Platform Console and is a unique ID that is used to
identify your default hosting URL in the form of YOUR-PROJECT-ID.appspot.com.

Appspot

Appstats

: The Java and Python SDKs each include a suite of tools called appstats for measuring the performance of your application. Appstats integrates with your application to record events, and it provides a web-based administrative interface for browsing statistics.

app.yaml

App Engine

: App Engine is Google's highly scalable platform for hosting web services. It consists of runtimes and SDKs for a number of popular programming languages.

Asynchronous Datastore

: The asynchronous Datastore API allows you to make parallel, non-blocking calls to the Datastore and to retrieve the results of these calls at a later point in the handling of the request. This API is available in both Java and Python.

Authentication

: App Engine applications can authenticate users using any one of three methods: Google Accounts, accounts on your own G Suite domains, or OpenID identifiers. (Note that the support for OpenID is deprecated and scheduled for removal.) An application can detect whether the current user has signed in, and can redirect the user to the appropriate sign-in page. With a signed-in user, the application can access the user's email address (or OpenID identifier if your application is using OpenID). The application can also detect whether the current user is an administrator, making it easy to implement admin-only areas of the app.

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B

Backend Instance

: An instance that is exempt from request deadlines and has access to more memory and CPU than normal instances. Its duration is determined by your configuration with limited scaling based on your settings. App Engine provides backends for applications that need faster performance, large amounts of addressable memory, and continuous or long-running background processes.Backends are supported by Java, Python and Go.

Billable Quota

: Billable quotas are resource maximums set by you, the application's administrator, to prevent the cost of your application from exceeding your budget. Every application gets an amount of each billable quota for free. You can increase billable quotas for your application by enabling billing, setting a daily budget, then allocating the budget to the quotas. Google charges you for only the resources that your application uses, and only for the amount of resources used above the free quota thresholds.

Blob

: An acronym for "Binary Large Object". A blob may refer to a large data object in the blobstore API, or it may refer to a property type in the Datastore API.

Blobstore API

: Supported in Java, Python, and Go, the blobstore API allows your application to serve data objects called blobs, which are much larger than the size allowed for objects in the Datastore service.

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C

Capabilities API

: Supported in Java, Python, and Go, with the capabilities API, your application can detect outages and scheduled downtime for specific API capabilities. With this information, you can disable the unavailable capability in your application before it impacts your users.

CGI

Channel API

: Supported in Java, Python, and Go, the channel API creates a persistent connection between your application and Google servers, allowing your application to send messages to JavaScript clients in real time without the use of polling. This is useful for applications designed to update users about new information immediately. Some example scenarios are collaborative applications, multi-player games, or chat rooms.

Cloud SDK

: The Google Cloud Software Development Kits (SDKs) for Java, Python, and Go each include a web server application that emulates all of the App Engine services on your local computer. Each SDK includes all of the APIs and libraries available on App Engine. The web server also simulates the secure sandbox environment, including checks for attempts to access system resources disallowed in the App Engine runtime environment. Each SDK also includes a tool to upload your application to App Engine. Previously these tools were available through the App Engine SDK, which is now deprecated.

Cloud Tools for Eclipse

: Cloud Tools for Eclipse is an open source plugin that
creates, tests, and deploys your Java App Engine standard environment
applications from within Eclipse.

Concurrency

: Concurrency occurs when systems execute computations simultaneously, and these computations interact with each other.

Concurrency Control

: Concurrency control ensures that systems generate correct results for concurrent operations while getting those results as quickly as possible.

Concurrent Request

: App Engine can send multiple requests in parallel to a web server. Concurrent Requests are supported by Java, Python 2.7 and Go.

Configuration File

: All App Engine applications require a configuration file to set important details like the application ID and version number. Python, PHP, and Go applications must use app.yaml as their main configuration file. Java 8 applications use the web.xml file.

CPU Time

: CPU time is the amount of time for which a central processing unit (CPU) in a Google data center processes requests from your application.

Cron Job

: The App Engine cron service allows users to create tasks to run at regular intervals. Cron jobs are supported by Java, Python and Go.

cron.xml

: For your Java 8 application, a configuration file called cron.xml or cron.yaml file controls scheduled tasks. It consists of a number of job definition pairs, each containing a <url> tag and a <schedule> tag.

cron.yaml

: For Java, Python and Go applications, a configuration file called cron.yaml controls scheduled tasks. It consists of a number of job definition pairs, each containing a url field and a schedule field.

Custom Domain

: To serve your application on another domain besides appspot.com, you need to
register your domain
with G Suite.

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D

Datastore

: Google App Engine uses a Datastore to distribute, replicate, and load balance your data through a simple API. It also includes a powerful query engine and processes transactions. Java, Python and Go can all make use of the Datastore.

Datastore Blob Property

: For Datastore storage, you must use the blob property value type to store unencoded byte strings longer than 1500 bytes. Blobs stored in this way are not indexed. For more information see the Java, Python or Go documentation

Datastore Call Deadline

: The Datastore call deadline is the maximum amount of time your API call to the Datastore can take. If your API call does not complete by the deadline, the Datastore aborts with an error and returns control to your application. For more information see the Java, Python or Go documentation.

Datastore Index

: Every Datastore query uses an index, a table containing the results for the query in the desired order. For more information see the Java, Python or Go documentation.

Datastore Index Configuration

: The App Engine Datastore uses indexes for every query your application makes. The Datastore updates these indexes whenever an entity changes, so the Datastore quickly returns results to you when your application makes a query. To do this, the Datastore needs to know in advance which queries the application will make. You specify which indexes your application needs in a configuration file. Java applications can use either datastore-indexes.xml or index.yaml. Python and Go applications must use index.yaml

Denial of Service Protection Service

: The App Engine denial of service (DoS) protection service allows you to protect your application from running out of quota when subjected to denial of service attacks or similar forms of abuse. You can blacklist IP addresses or subnets, and the service drops requests routed from those addresses or subnets before App Engine calls your code. DoS Protection can be configured for Java applications using either dos.xml or dos.yaml. Python and Go applications must use dos.yaml

Deployment Descriptor

: Java web applications use a deployment descriptor file called web.xml to determine how URLs map to servlets, which URLs require authentication, and other information.

dev_appserver

Development Console

: The development web server includes a console web application. The consoles in Java, Python and Go, all let you browse the local Datastore, but each console also has unique features of its own.

Development Web Server

: The Cloud SDK includes a development web server for testing your application on your computer. In Java, the development web server simulates the App Engine Java runtime environment and all of its services, including the Datastore. In Python, the development web server simulates your application running in the App Engine Python runtime environment; this simulated environment enforces some sandbox restrictions such as restricted system functions and Python module imports. For Go, the development web server simulates the App Engine Go runtime environment and all Go's supported services.

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E

Eclipse

: Eclipse is an open-source integrated development environment (IDE) for Java developers. Java developers primarily use Eclipse, but it also supports other languages (including Python) because of its robust set of plugins.

Entity

: The Datastore writes data in objects known as entities, and each entity has a key that identifies the entity. For more information see the entity documentation for Java, Python or Go.

Entity Group

: An entity group is a set of entities whose keys all specify the same root entity.

Experimental

: Features marked "Experimental"; are innovative new features that we are developing rapidly. The App Engine SLA does not support these features, and Google may make backwards-incompatible changes to them at any time.

Exploding Index

: Custom indexes that refer to multiple properties with multiple values can get very large with only a few values. To completely record such properties, the index table must include a row for every combination of values of the indexed properties. Because exploding indexes contain so many values, they increase the amount of Datastore CPU time that your application uses. The SDK attempts to detect exploding indexes and suggests an alternative, but in some cases you may require custom configuration. See the Datastore Indexes page for Java or Python for more information.

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G

Google Cloud Platform Console

: A web-based user interface for managing your application. You can use the Google Cloud Platform Console to create new apps, change which version of your application is serving, and perform tasks such as viewing error logs and analyzing client requests. You can also use the console to administer your Datastore, manage task queues, and test new versions of your app.

Google Cloud SDK

: With App Engine, you can build web applications for the standard environment. Your application runs in a secured “sandbox” environment to isolate your application from security threats.

Google Protocol RPC Library

: The Google Protocol RPC library is a simple way to create well-defined, easy-to-use, web-based remote procedure call (RPC) services. An RPC service is a collection of message types and remote methods that provide a structured way for external applications to interact with web applications. Because it is possible to define messages and services using only the Python programming language, it's easy to get started developing your own services.

Google Web Toolkit (GWT)

: Google Web Toolkit (GWT) is a free, open source development toolkit for building and optimizing complex browser-based applications. Its goal is to enable productive development of high-performance web applications without the developer having to be an expert in browser quirks, XMLHttpRequest, and JavaScript.

Go Programming Language

: By being expressive, concise, clean, and efficient, the Go programming language is an open source project to make programmers more productive. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write programs optimized for multicore and networked machines while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code, but it has the convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time reflection.

GWT

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I

Idle Instances

: Idle instances, or resident instances are instances primed to receive additional load for your application. App Engine keeps these instances in reserve at all times. You can see these instances marked as "Resident" in the Instances page of the GCP Console.

Index

: Every Datastore query uses an index, a table containing the results for the query in the desired order. The Datastore maintains an index for every query an application intends to make. As the entities change, the Datastore updates the indexes with the correct results. When the application executes a query, the Datastore fetches the results directly from the corresponding index.

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J

Java Archive (JAR)

: A Java ARchive combines multiple files into one usually to distribute Java applications or Java libraries over the Internet.

Java Data Object (JDO)

: Java Data Objects (JDO) is a standard interface for storing objects containing data into a database. The standard defines interfaces for annotating Java objects, retrieving objects with queries, and interacting with a database using transactions. An application that uses the JDO interface can work with different kinds of databases without using any database-specific code, including relational databases, hierarchical databases, and object databases.

Java Development Server

: The Cloud SDK includes a development web server for testing your application on your computer. The development web server simulates the App Engine Java runtime environment and all of its services, including the Datastore. You can run the development server from the command line.

Java Persistence API (JPA)

: Java persistence API (JPA) is a standard interface for storing objects containing data into a relational database. The standard defines interfaces for annotating Java objects, retrieving objects using queries, and interacting with a database using transactions.

Java Runtime Environment (JRE)

: App Engine applications can be implemented using the Java programming language, and other languages that use the java virtual machine. The App Engine Java runtime environment includes the Java 7 JVM and interfaces to App Engine services.

Java Servlet

: A servlet is a Java programming language class used to extend the capabilities of servers that host applications accessed via a request-response programming model. Although servlets can respond to any type of request, you commonly use them to extend the applications hosted by web servers. When App Engine receives a web request from your application, it invokes the servlet that corresponds to the URL as described in your application's deployment descriptor. It uses the Java servlet API to provide the request data to the servlet, and accept the response data.

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K

Key

: A key is a unique identifier for each entity in the Datastore. Keys consist of a kind, a unique name assigned either by the app or the Datastore, and an optional ancestor path that specifies a parent entity. If an ancestor path is present, the entity belongs to an entity group defined by that parent.

Kind

: Each Datastore entity is of a particular kind, which is simply a name specified by the application. A kind categorizes the entity for the purpose of queries. For example, a human resources application might represent each employee at a company with an entity of the kind “Employee”. Unlike rows in a table, two entities of the same kind need not have the same properties. If required, an application can establish such a restriction in its data model. For more details on Kinds see the Java, Python and Go documentation.

Kindless Query

: In a kindless query, App Engine Datastore returns all entites matching query constraints regardless of kind. See the query documentation for Java, Python and Go for more details.

Kindless Ancestor Query

: In a kindless ancestor query, App Engine Datastore returns all ancestors to a given entity in a query regardless of kind. See the query documentation for Java, Python and Go for more details.

M

Mail

MapReduce

: A computing model developed by Google to do efficient distributed computing over large data sets. Mapreduce is supported on the Java and Python runtimes. Input data values in the MapReduce model are mapped (assigned lookup keys) and stored in intermediate storage, then the resulting key-value pairs are shuffled (collated by key), and finally the collated values are reduced (manipulated to yield desired results).

Maximum Pending Latency

: The maximum length of time a request must wait
in the pending request queue before App Engine
starts a new instance to serve it. A higher value means users
may wait longer for your application to serve their request; a lower value
means users don't have to wait as long, but your application may cost more to
run. App Engine can automatically determine the maximum pending latency based
on recent request data, or you can specify this setting
manually in each module's configuration file.

Memcache

: A distributed in-memory data cache to speed up common Datastore queries. Memcache is supported on the Java, Python and Go runtimes.

Metadata Queries

: Metadata queries construct expressions that return metadata from your Datastore about namespaces, kinds, and properties. The queries return your metadata in dynamically generated entities. The most common use for metadata is to implement, for example, back-end administrative functions and meta-programming environments. For more information on using Metadata Queries see the Java and Python documentation.

Minimum Pending Latency

: The minimum amount of time a request can wait in the pending queue before
being served by an instance. You can specify this setting manually in each
module's configuration file, or you can let App Engine
choose it for you automatically based on request volume.

Multitenancy

: Multitenancy is the name given to a software architecture in which one instance of an application, running on a remote server, serves many client organizations (also known as tenants). For more information on using Multitenancy see the Java and Python documentation.

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O

OAuth

: OAuth is a protocol that allows users to grant a third party limited permission to access a web application, without sharing their credentials (username and password) with the third party. The third party can be a web application, or any other application with the capability of invoking a web browser for the users, such as a desktop application or an application running on a smart phone. Both Java and Python support OAuth.

Partitioning

Pending Latency

Pending Request Queue

: The pending request queue where pending requests wait when no
instances are available to serve them. By default, App Engine
automatically determines how long requests wait in the pending queue, but you
can also manually configure this and other aspects of task processing in
each module's configuration file.

Pull Queue

: A pull queue is a type of task queue in which a task consumer “pulls” tasks from your application, processes them outside your application, and then deletes them. The task consumer can be part of your App Engine application (such as a backend) or a system outside of App Engine (using the Task Queue REST API).

Push Queue

: A push queue is a type of task queue in which your application processes tasks using HTTP request handlers. Each Task object contains an application-specific URL with a request handler for the task, and an optional data payload that parameterizes the task. For example, consider a calendaring application that needs to notify an invitee, via email, that an event has been updated. The data payload for this task consists of the email address and name of the invitee, along with a description of the event. You can use push queues only within the App Engine environment; if you need to access App Engine tasks from outside of App Engine, use pull queues instead.

Python Development Server

: The App Engine Python SDK includes a web server application you can run on your computer that simulates your application running in the App Engine Python runtime environment. The simulated environment enforces some sandbox restrictions, such as restricted system functions and Python module imports, but not others, like request time-outs or quotas. The server also simulates the services by performing their tasks locally.

Python Runtime Environment

: App Engine applications can be implemented using the Python programming language. The App Engine Python runtime environment includes a specialized version of the Python interpreter, the standard Python library, libraries and APIs for App Engine, and a standard interface to the web server layer.

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Q

Query

: A Datastore query retrieves entities that meet a specified set of conditions. The query specifies an entity kind, zero or more conditions based on entity property values (sometimes called "filters"), and zero or more sort order descriptions. When the query is executed, it fetches all entities of the given kind that meet all of the given conditions, sorted in the order described. Queries are supported in both Java and Python.

Query Cursor

: Query cursors allow an application to perform a query and retrieve a batch of results, then fetch additional results for the same query in a subsequent web request without the overhead of a query offset. After the application fetches some results for a query, it can ask for an encoded string that represents the location in the result set after the last result fetched (the “cursor”). The application can use the cursor to fetch additional results starting from that point at a later time. Query cursors are supported in both Java and Python.

queue.xml

: This file configures task queues for Java 8 applications. This file controls many parameters of task queues such as the storage quota, processing rate, the maximum number of concurrent requests, and other values. This configuration file is optional for push queues.

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R

Read Policy

: In order to increase data availability, you can set the Datastore read policy so that all reads and queries are eventually consistent. While the API also allows you to explicitly set a strong consistency policy, such a setting has no practical effect because non-ancestor queries are always eventually consistent regardless of policy. For more details on the Datastore read policy see the Java and Python documentation.

Remote Procedure Call (RPC)

: In a remote procedure call (RPC), a computer program executes a method in another address space (commonly on another computer on a shared network) without the programmer explicitly coding the details for this remote interaction. From the programmer's point of view, the call is local to the executing program.

Role

: App Engine provides three roles—Viewer, Editor, Owner—supplying different levels of access to GCP Console features. Each progressively stronger role includes all permissions from the previous role.

RPC

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S

Safety Limit

: Safety limits are resource maximums set by App Engine to ensure the integrity of the system. These resources describe the boundaries of the architecture, and App Engine expects all applications to run within the same limits.

Scheduler

: The infrastructure component that determines how many instances are needed to serve your application's current traffic and to which instance to send a request.

Service Stub

: A service stub is a method that simulates the behavior of a service in the SDK. Both Java and Python support service stubs.

Servlet

Sharding

Snapshot Isolation

Static Files

: Static files are files to be served directly to the user for a given URL, such as images, CSS stylesheets, or JavaScript source files. Static file handlers describe which files in the application directory are static files, and which URLs serve them. In Java static files are set in the appengine-web.xml file. For Python,
PHP,
and Go they are configured in the app.yaml file.

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T

Task Queues

: Task queues enable your applications to schedule tasks to be done later in the background. As such, your application defines tasks, adds them to a queue, and then uses the queue to process them in aggregate. You can configure queue settings in queue.yaml or queue.xml. See Queue Definitions for more information about configuring queues. Task Queues are supported by Java, Python and Go.

Token Bucket

: In App Engine task queues, the token bucket algorithm used by App Engine determines the rate at which the App Engine task queue processes push tasks. For more information on the token bucket see the Java, Python or Go documentation.

Transaction

: The App Engine Datastore supports transactions. A transaction is an operation or set of operations that is atomic—either all of the operations in the transaction occur, or none of them occur. An application can perform multiple operations and calculations in a single transaction. Datastore transcations are supported by the Java, Python and Go runtimes.

Transaction Isolation

: In the App Engine Datastore, the isolation level means how much impact a query has on other simultaneous queries being executed. Preferably, each query must run in its own vacuum to avoid any concurrency issues. For a more in-depth discussion on these concerns, see transaction isolation.

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U

Unit Testing

: You write unit tests while you develop your App Engine applications. This methodology provides small, maintainable, and reusable units of code and your tests run in your development environment without involving remote components. App Engine provides testing utilities that use local implementations of Datastore and other App Engine services. This means you can exercise your code's use of these services locally, without deploying your code to App Engine, by using service stubs. A service stub is a method that simulates the behavior of a service. Unit testing for Java and Python App Engine applications is supported.

Upload App

: Upload app is an AppCfg command that you use to upload your application to App Engine. This is a required step after you have registered your application in the GCP Console.

URL Fetch Service

: App Engine applications can communicate with other applications or access
other resources on the web by fetching URLs. An application can use the URL
fetch service to issue HTTP and HTTPS requests and receive responses.
The URL Fetch service is supported in
Java,
Python,
PHP,
and Go.

Users Service

: The Users service provides APIs for your application to integrate with Google user accounts. With the users service, your users can use the Google accounts they already have to sign in to your application. The URL Fetch service is supported in Java, Python and Go.

V

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W

Webapp Framework

: The webapp framework is a simple web application framework you can use for developing Python 2.5 web applications for App Engine. It is compatible with the WSGI standard for Python web application containers. In the Python 2.7 runtime, it is replaced with the backwards-compatible webapp2 framework.

White List

WSGI

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X

XMPP

: The XMPP (Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol) API makes it possible to write App Engine applications that communicate with users—or even other applications—over the XMPP protocol. XMPP is also known as "Jabber" and is supported by Google Talk and other chat clients. XMPP is supported in the Java, Python and Go runtimes.

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Y

YAML (Yet Another Markup Language)

: YAML is a generic data serialization language that you can easily read. It can be used to express the data structures of most modern programming languages. Usually, you use YAML in configuration files, or as a way to print logging/debugging information. App Engine has several different YAML configuration files available for services such as the Datastore, task queue, and backends. For more information, see the Python,
PHP,
or Go configuration documentation.